Screws: Difference between revisions

From OLPC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{draft}}
{{OLPC}}


These are the screws used in the XO laptop, and their locations. As per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_metric_screw_thread the number immediately after the M is the rough diameter, followed by the pitch after the first x. Two of our screws have a precise length in english units, but not metric units.
'''THIS IS A DRAFT, AND THESE DESCRIPTIONS MAY NOT BE CORRECT.'''

These are the screws available in the XO and where they go. As per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_metric_screw_thread the number immediately after the M is the rough diameter, followed by the pitch after the first x. Two of our screws have a precise length in english units, but not metric units.


[[Image:Screws.jpg]]
[[Image:Screws.jpg]]
Line 10: Line 8:


* (A) M2x.4 x 4mm - the common blackened ones. There are a ''lot'' of these - use anywhere a specific type of screw is not specified.
* (A) M2x.4 x 4mm - the common blackened ones. There are a ''lot'' of these - use anywhere a specific type of screw is not specified.
* (B) M2x.4 x 2mm - the short shiny ones. There are 4 of them. 2 of these hold the circuit board on, the other 2 go in the raised holes on either side of the board just above it - look for this symbol: [[Image:small-screw-icon.jpg]]
* (B) M2x.4 x 2mm - the short shiny ones. There are 4 of them. 2 of these hold the keyboard controller circuit board in place, the other two help screw the keyboard to the keyboard bezel. Holes for these screws are marked with this symbol: [[Image:small-screw-icon.jpg]].
* (C) M2x.4 x 6mm - the long shiny ones. There are 2 of them. They hold down the hinge cover, one on each side.
* (C) M2x.4 x 6mm - the long shiny ones. There are 6 of them. Four are used to attach the back cover (over the motherboard). Two are used to hold the hinge cover together, one on each side.
* (D) M2.5x.45 x 0.5in - the antenna ear screws.
* (D) M2.5x.45 x 0.5in - The antenna ear screws. Four of these hold the antenna ear clamps in place.


Not shown:
Not shown:


* fat M2x.4 x 0.3in - the screen screws. These are cushioned by 4 black rubber ring bumpers and hold the screen in place.
* fat M2x.4 x 0.3in - the screen screws. These are cushioned by 4 black rubber ring bumpers and hold the screen in place.
* M3x.45 x 5mm - There are 4 of them. These go on the hinge, attaching the bottom and top halves of the XO
* M3x.45 x 5mm - There are 4 of them. These attach the hinge to the bottom half of the laptop.

{{Category:Hardware}}
{{Category:Repair}}

Revision as of 02:20, 12 July 2008

  This page is monitored by the OLPC team.

These are the screws used in the XO laptop, and their locations. As per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_metric_screw_thread the number immediately after the M is the rough diameter, followed by the pitch after the first x. Two of our screws have a precise length in english units, but not metric units.

Screws.jpg

From left to right:

  • (A) M2x.4 x 4mm - the common blackened ones. There are a lot of these - use anywhere a specific type of screw is not specified.
  • (B) M2x.4 x 2mm - the short shiny ones. There are 4 of them. 2 of these hold the keyboard controller circuit board in place, the other two help screw the keyboard to the keyboard bezel. Holes for these screws are marked with this symbol: Small-screw-icon.jpg.
  • (C) M2x.4 x 6mm - the long shiny ones. There are 6 of them. Four are used to attach the back cover (over the motherboard). Two are used to hold the hinge cover together, one on each side.
  • (D) M2.5x.45 x 0.5in - The antenna ear screws. Four of these hold the antenna ear clamps in place.

Not shown:

  • fat M2x.4 x 0.3in - the screen screws. These are cushioned by 4 black rubber ring bumpers and hold the screen in place.
  • M3x.45 x 5mm - There are 4 of them. These attach the hinge to the bottom half of the laptop.

Pages specific to the laptop hardware. For a gentle intro, see XO; for the various models of XO hardware, see the subcategory XO. This category includes pages about the repairing the XO laptop. The Repair Guide or the Troubleshooting Guide are good places to start.